Politiemensen, officieren en rechters over strafrecht
Einde inhoudsopgave
Politiemensen, officieren en rechters over strafrecht (SteR nr. 49) 2020/Summary:Summary
Politiemensen, officieren en rechters over strafrecht (SteR nr. 49) 2020/Summary
Summary
Documentgegevens:
J. Kort, datum 01-03-2020
- Datum
01-03-2020
- Auteur
J. Kort
- JCDI
JCDI:ADS200816:1
- Vakgebied(en)
Strafprocesrecht / Algemeen
Deze functie is alleen te gebruiken als je bent ingelogd.
Police officers, prosecutors and judges on criminal justice
An empirical study into the vieuws of three groups of professionals on criminal justice in the Netherlands
Over time, developments in the Dutch criminal justice system have shown that its underlying values can be emphasized differently. From the 1970s, attempts were made to reduce and prevent negative side effects of criminal sanctions. On the contrary, policy measures favored a more ‘streamlined’ response to crime via the criminal justice system and more repression since the 1980s. In recent decades, the actual functioning of this system gave rise to discussion regularly. The legitimacy of the criminal justice system is being questioned and recent reorganizations of the police, the public prosecution service and the courts have always been the result of political and sometimes public dissatisfaction with the practices of these institutions and a need for more transparency, decisiveness and centralization.
This book presents an empirical study of the opinions of police officers, public prosecutors and criminal judges on the functioning of the criminal justice system. Remarkably, little is known about how the tension between the values of due process and crime control manifests itself in practice. This is all the more surprising given the importance of this tension for understanding contemporary developments within criminal law. It is also salient in all phases of criminal investigation, prosecution and judicial assessment. The present study was not limited to the tension between due process and crime control; the tension between the various goals of criminal sanctions in the opinions of police officers, prosecutors and judges on criminal justice, have also been the subject of investigation. Both dimensions may be important to better understand the criminal justice system and its officials. This study provides insight into how opinions of police officers, public prosecutors and judges relate to due process and crime control on the one hand and to different criminal justice goals on the other. The following research questions have been formulated prior to this study:
How do police officers in the Netherlands view the functioning of the criminal justice system and in particular the judicial assessment of their work?
How do prosecutors and judges regard the views expressed by police officers on criminal justice and what is their own opinion on this?
To what extent do the views of police officers, public prosecutors and judges on the functioning of the criminal justice system reflect the tension between due process and crime control? What role do different preferences for goals of criminal sanctions play in this?
What explanations can be given for the opinions of police officers, prosecutors and judges on criminal justice?
What are the possible consequences of the views that police officers, public prosecutors and judges have on criminal justice?
Methods
This study attempts to gain insight in police officers’, prosecutors’ and judges’ views on criminal justice and in the factors that may contribute to these views. To answer the research questions a combination of research methods was used. In four units of the Dutch National Police, police officers were interviewed and then surveyed to find out the prevalence of certain views among them. The interviews focused on the question of how police officers perceived the criminal justice system and to what extent they trusted the public prosecution agency and the courts. Subsequently, interviews were held with prosecutors (in two different public prosecutor’s offices) and criminal judges (in two different courts). They were asked what they thought of the police officers’ views. The magistrates were also asked to give their views on the tension between due process and crime control and on different goals of criminal sanctions.
Theoretical framework
The classic analysis of criminal justice by Herbert Packer (1964), consists of two ideal-typical models: due process and crime control. The essential elements of these models are as follows:
Crime control
Due process
Presumption of guilt
Presumption of innocence
Legal controls minimal
Fair trial
System designed for crime control
Defendant’s rights are pivotal
According to Skolnick (1966), the principal problem of the police in a democratic society consists of the tension between effectiveness and legality. In Justice without Trial he focuses on the question of how police officers perceive the conflict between the obligations of maintaining order and complying with the rule of law. Following Skolnick, this book also uses Packers two models to study the (different) views police officers, prosecutors and judges take on criminal justice. In addition, it is assumed that different preferences for goals of criminal sanctions determine these professional views on criminal justice. To help identify different positions in relation to sanctions, justifications for punishment are taken into account. The philosophical approaches are generally divided in two camps: consequentialists and retributivists (after ‘retribution’). Retribution implies the imposition of punishment in response to actions already undertaken by the offender. In the consequentialist approach, justification for punishment is found in what it will achieve in the future.
Empirical findings
Views on criminal justice in three groups of professionals
This study shows that most Dutch police officers are dissatisfied with the outcomes of the criminal justice system. They think the system is not offering enough support for the control of crime by the police. The dissatisfaction of many police officers is mostly related to the application of pre-trial detention, the assessment of evidence and the penalties imposed.
Many police officers are critical of decisions made by prosecutors and judges about pre-trial detention. Police officers often feel frustrated when the public prosecutor decides, against their opinion, not to request (extension of) pre-trial detention, or when such a request is rejected by the judge. Most police officers believe that it is too difficult to provide enough evidence in criminal cases: they think prosecutors and judges set extremely high standards for it. As a result, they feel that the criminal justice system creates obstacles that make it unnecessarily difficult for the police to perform their duties. The criminal justice system generally does not offer the outcomes police officers consider to be just.
To a large extent, police officers consider criminal cases on the bases of their own (non-legal) expertise. This is closely related to how police officers often judge the suspects’ guilt. As was also found by Skolnick (1966: 182-203) they tend to think in terms not of legal, but of ‘factual’ guilt. This notion is based on probabilistic reasoning with typifications (Schütz, 1932). Police officers use this way of reasoning on a daily basis to recognize dangers and potential perpetrators, and to quickly determine how to deal with urgent situations.
A majority of the police officers in the Netherlands consider the sentences imposed by judges generally to be too light. Police officers are especially critical of the sanctions imposed in cases of petty crime, such as shoplifting, car break-ins, and drug dealing. Their dissatisfaction and disapproval concentrate on how repeat offenders and certain groups of juvenile delinquents are dealt with. In their view, recidivists, such as drug-addicts who are repeatedly involved in all kinds of petty crime, should be punished more severely. Special measures for drug-addicted repeat offenders, such as a two-year confinement (in the Netherlands the so-called ISD measure), should be applied more often and at an earlier stage. Many police officers feel that the current ‘lenient’ sanctions mean that the criminal law generally fails to deter criminals. Police officers think that some categories of juvenile delinquents are much more often and more seriously involved in crime than judges often seem to assume. They wonder if it is right to apply juvenile criminal law in such cases. Although many police officers do not oppose against community service sanctions in general, there is nevertheless much dissatisfaction with their application, especially when it comes to their appropriateness and severity. In case of traffic offences (‘Mulderfeiten’) such as exceeding the speed limit, driving through a red light, or parking offences, police officers think that the penalties imposed are too harsh, especially as compared to criminal law sanctions.
Criminal law decisions often turn out to be very different from what police officers think is necessary. However, among both the prosecutors and the judges who were interviewed, the vast majority seems to be satisfied with the outcomes of the criminal justice system. This also means that prosecutors and judges regularly reject police officers’ opinions on these outcomes as described above. The ‘quasi-magistrate role’ that Skolnick (1966) observed among prosecutors is also found in this study: prosecutors often see it as their duty to explain legal considerations to police officers. However, both prosecutors and judges also report dissatisfaction and discomfort concerning the performance of the criminal justice system. Although prosecutors and judges have their own approach to the issues police officers bring up, they sometimes speak of their critique with understanding.
Furthermore, there appear to be differences of opinion among magistrates on how the criminal justice system should function. This study shows that there are different views among prosecutors and judges on how to deal with pre-trial detention, evidence and punishment. For example, some of the prosecutors and (to a lesser extent) judges feel that under current circumstances a strict interpretation of legal grounds for pre-trial detention is not appropriate. This is in accordance with the opinion of many police officers that pre-trial detention should be applied more often and for longer periods of time. Prosecutors and judges often think that delinquents may (partially) avoid their punishment because criminal proceedings take too much time. Pre-trial detention itself is then seen as some sort of punishment.
Most of the judges do not share the police officers’ critical views of the way in which evidence is assessed in the criminal justice system. Prosecutors are also less negative about the legal assessment of evidence than police officers. However, some of the prosecutors and judges consider the legal assessment of evidence to be too strict in some cases. In addition, prosecutors believe they are easier to convince of the guilt of suspects than judges. Judges also experience such a difference, referring to some prosecutors who would deal with strong indications and plausible scenarios of guilt in a non-critical way.
It is striking that there are different views among prosecutors and judges on the element of conviction or belief in the legal assessment of evidence. In one view, this element should not be considered (exclusively) as an incentive to falsify evidence or to critically reflect on the evidence used, but also as an opportunity to judge evidence on the basis of common sense. This view implies a probabilistic approach to evidence, where some uncertainty may be seen as permissible and where the overall structure in which evidence is presented should not always be crucial. Whether a substantial defense has been put forward by the suspect or his lawyer is what’s crucial in this view. On the other hand, there is the view that the interpretation of different parts of the evidence should be critical. These different takes on evidence are also reflected, for example, in magistrates’ views on the right to remain silent. According to some, the suspect’s right to remain silent is fundamental. Others recognize circumstances that can cause this right to lose its significance. For example, some judges do not think a suspect’s statement is to be considered reliable if it is introduced halfway through the criminal procedure.
This study shows that the majority of the prosecutors and judges is satisfied with the penal climate in the Netherlands, with the judges having the highest level of satisfaction. However, some dissatisfaction with criminal sanctions in cases of petty crime is present in all three groups examined. In case of petty crime, the time needed to process cases is often experienced as being too long and as an obstacle to control crime effectively. Moreover, in all three groups under study, the opinion is present that criminal justice should be tougher and that higher penalties are required.
Background to the views described
Next to their actual experiences with the outcomes of criminal cases, the grapevine also influences police officers’ views on the criminal justice system to a great extent. ‘Canteen culture’ (Waddington, 1999) is a factor in the emergence of critical views on this system, which is being strengthened by the often limited feedback police officers receive on their cases from the public prosecution service. Specific responsibilities and powers also seem to influence the differences in opinion between police officers, public prosecutors and judges, as well as differences in training and work situation. In this way each group seems to develop its own perspective on criminal law.
Many police officers are displeased by the outcomes of a part of the criminal cases they have worked on. As a result these police officers often think that prosecutors and judges are not competent. These officers increasingly rely on their own (non-legal) ‘expertise’ (Skolnick, 1966) and demands of ‘street justice’ (Sykes, 1986). They believe they have superior knowledge of the context in which offenses take place and consider themselves fully capable of determining what is required to solve problems (for i.e. a neighborhood) effectively and justly.
The perspective that prosecutors develop on criminal law is more complex. Compared to police officers they know much more about criminal proceedings and they often possess more extensive information about the suspect. On this basis, prosecutors attach more meaning to due process and also to consequences of criminal interventions, as compared to police officers. The fact that they often have more distance to the actual crime, victims and perpetrators also makes a difference. As a result, prosecutors seem to focus more on criminal justice than on ‘street justice’ (cf. Sykes, 1986).
Nevertheless, some of the public prosecutors believe to have a more complete understanding of criminal cases than judges do. They think their perspective is partly formed by the direct and personal experiences of police officers, partly by their own involvement in criminal investigations. Prosecutors speak of an ‘investigation perspective’: a lot of information and impressions that form a part of this do not come forward in the formal criminal proceedings. From this perspective, judges often seem to live in a different reality. On the basis of their ‘investigation perspective’, prosecutors generally are more in favor of a ‘tough approach’ to crime. Furthermore, it is thought by some prosecutors that it isn’t necessary for them to extensively consider the consequences of different criminal interventions. They feel their role is primarily to express moral indignation about committed crimes, on behalf of society.
The perspective of public prosecutors may also be dependent on recent policy developments. Their new tasks and workload influence their perspective on criminal justice. For example, prosecutors now spend part of their time on administrative consultations and partnerships (see also: Lindeman, 2012; 2017). Prosecutors also seem to focus on security policy objectives (more than judges).
The interviews show that judges generally acknowledge that their work situation implies a greater distance from criminal offenses, compared to police officers and public prosecutors. Emotions and part of the information that may come to the fore during criminal investigation, normally remain outside their scope. Sometimes they try to bridge the difference in perspective with the police and the public prosecution service, for example by conducting extensive interviews during the court hearing.
Judges also feel that there are some additional differences in perspective, compared with police officers and prosecutors. The decision-making authority of judges makes that they feel highly responsible for avoiding any evidential mistake or miscarriage of justice. They think about criminal sanctions in a similar way. Possible negative side effects of criminal sanctions are often given more weight by judges than by police officers and prosecutors. This is also related to the way judges perceive their role: they believe it is limited to the individual case. As a result, they seem to be further removed from police officers in their views on criminal justice than prosecutors, who are more policy-oriented and concerned with developments in crime. Yet this distance is not equal for all judges; there are also views among them that fit with the concepts of ‘crime control’ and a ‘tough approach’ (cf. De Keijser, 2000). As mentioned before, these opinions can be found in all groups that have been studied.
Police officers, prosecutors, and judges are confronted with important current circumstances, such as the political debate on criminal justice and high levels of media attention for criminal cases. The interviews with members of these three professional groups show that they are not unresponsive to these contextual circumstances. Interviews also show that all these groups aim to make the criminal justice system operate in such a way that the general public can approve of it. Again, this may be an important additional factor to explain the (perhaps unexpected) similarities in views between the groups in this study. Another factor is the mutual exchange of views and interpretations of reality between these groups, as part of their work. A final factor explaining corresponding views is that police officers, prosecutors and judges all appear to use an ‘involved’ perspective (cf. Elias, 1982) on criminal justice from time to time, instead of a distant, critical and rational perspective.
Packers Due Process and Crime Control models
It is almost too obvious to confirm that Packer (1964; 1968) rightly pointed to an important field of tension in the criminal justice system, between due process on the one hand and crime control on the other. This study confirms that Packers models can be found in the views described in this study. It has also become clear that there are significant differences in views on criminal law within the three groups under study, although ‘crime control’ and ‘due process’ do not appear to exclude each other in these views. According to Packers expectation, elements of both models are usually combined in the views of these professionals. However, the difference between the view in which criminal law acts as a ‘shield’ (due process) and views in which it is primarily a ‘sword’ (crime control) appears to be more complex than Packer suggested.
Firstly, in addition to due process and crime control there are some other objectives that play a role in the views of police officers, public prosecutors and judges on criminal law. For instance, police officers are mainly concerned with establishing ‘street justice’. This means that their instrumental view on criminal law is partly based on feelings of justice. In general, practical and moral arguments play an important role in the views of police officers on criminal justice.
Secondly, while prosecutors and judges do not appear to express their views in terms of Packers crime control model, they still do not agree with the way some colleagues assess evidence, thinking this is extremely cautious. To adequately describe such ideas, Packers ‘presumption of guilt’ isn’t sufficient. In this study the term ‘probabilistic reasoning’ was used to do so. In some of the described views on evidence assessment, probability and belief are important elements. In line with this, some judges prefer to consider themselves as ‘neutral decision makers’ who only passively listen to the pleadings and defenses in the courtroom. Other judges, however, believe that their work in a criminal case involves a more active reflection on potential gaps in the evidence presented. Such a difference in opinion raises the question whether a core assumption of the due process model is correct: that suspects are always optimally protected by criminal proceedings in which the judge plays a central role. Likewise, a minimized criminal trial (according to the crime control model) is never an underlying goal in the opinions described. This also holds for the described views on pre-trial detention. Police officers do not seem very aware of the legal rules that apply. Views on pre-trial detention among prosecutors and judges can be explained by the reduced chance that a prison sentence will be imposed at a later stage if a suspect was not taken into custody. Lead times, aspects of quality, personnel capacity and organizational efficiency also have their effect on views on pre-trial detention. The same applies to views on how to deal with the assessment of criminal evidence assessment: they may be shaped by due process and crime control considerations, but also by limitations in quality of personnel, available personnel capacity and financial resources. These limitations by definition leave opportunities unused to obtain better evidence in criminal cases. Therefore, to disregard i.e. personnel capacity and organizational efficiency, like Packer did with his models, implies omitting important factors that may be relevant for understanding how the criminal justice system operates. The tension that is created by due process demands in relation to instrumental objectives of criminal justice, seems to disappear (in part) if sufficient capacity and financial resources are made available. Under the right circumstances, without a doubt, efficiency can be seen as an aspect of quality of criminal proceedings (see also: Ashworth, 1998).
Conclusion
Justice may be seen as the central goal of the criminal justice system. Hereby, justice can be related to both the legal proceedings of the criminal justice system and to the (instrumental) outcomes that it can have (Packer, 1964; 1968). In the area of tension between the two perspectives, this research yields some points for attention for the future.
The discontent among police officers regarding the functioning of the criminal justice system is important. More attention to this is needed. Police officers refer to a lack of skills and knowledge concerning the handling of criminal cases by the police; they think this contributes to inadequate responses by the criminal justice system. However, this research makes clear that perceived problems will not be solved by extra training alone. Further professionalization of the police should also entail promoting awareness among police officers of the dilemmas involved in criminal justice: between due process and crime control, and between retribution and a consequentialist approach to crime. Use of their discretion should be based on a good understanding of the limits of the police and the judiciary.
On the long run the discontent of many police officers can have several undesirable consequences. Therefore, more attention should be payed to lawful police action and to improving the quality of, among other things, official records and files (so that criminal responses will be more in line with expectations), but also to managing expectations. Ideas regarding criminal sanctions must be realistic. This study also shows that improvements in the relationship between the police and the public prosecution service are necessary; police officers are in need of more feedback. It might be beneficial for both prosecutors and judges to have an internship periodically in the police organization. This might promote that members of these three professional groups learn from each other and this might contribute to a better understanding of their diverging perspectives.
Discontent about the instrumental and moral significance of criminal sanctions is not limited to police officers. Some prosecutors and judges are also dissatisfied about these issues (albeit for other reasons). In all three groups investigated, this study indicates that there is a clear moral dimension to the way criminal sanctions are being considered. The deterrent effect of punishment is not necessarily seen as instrumental in combating crime, but also fulfills a symbolic function: when behavior is unacceptable, this must be made clear in a highly expressive way. However, if this symbolic function of the criminal justice system would prevail, the result might be that consequences of criminal sanctions will no longer be taken into account. For example, research showing that offenders are significantly less likely to repeat offenses after community service than after prison (Wermink et al., 2010) is relevant. And no matter how great the claim that is placed on the criminal justice system to create moral order and to provide safety, the premise better safe than sorry is at odds with its legitimate operation. Disorder and uncertainty are only increased when the state and the judiciary can no longer be regarded constitutional nor reliable.
Various attempts are being made to involve judges in the context of a criminal case, i.e. by showing consequences for possible victims and neighborhoods. This research showed that some judges themselves like to broaden their perspective pertaining to the file that is submitted to them. It has not been investigated to what extent judgments are influenced by this, yet the question of the right balance between due process and crime control can be raised. Some judges prefer to regard the lawyer as crucial in realizing due process. This underlines the importance of accessible and high-quality legal assistance for suspects.
This research gives reason to think that prosecutors and judges are in need of more professional debate and also of guidelines. Legal equality does not come about automatically. It seems to be of great importance to discuss professional differences of opinion, as many of these have emerged from this study, and to eliminate them where possible. How do police officers, prosecutors and judges deal with various calls for leadership (Vinzant & Crothers, 1996) in moral and social choices? Skills are needed to deal with these choices. Also recognition of the different perspectives on questions that arise in practice is necessary.
How can the police solve quality problems and ensure that their work causes no problems later on during the criminal prosecution? A question that is also raised by this study is how the public prosecution service can better respond to perceived problems with the division of responsibilities: who ultimately coordinates a good and quick settlement of a criminal case? This study also draws attention once again to the need to control lead times at all levels in criminal justice, not so that efficiency goes at the expense of the necessary quality, but in such a way that criminal justice is perceived as socially effective and that there is an acceptable explanation if proceedings take longer than seems necessary.